WHAT IS PSYCHOLINGUISTICS

WHAT IS PSYCHOLINGUISTICS

 

Psycholinguistics investigates the mental mechanisms underlying language processing.  (Cognitive)

How to perceive words and store them in the mind, how to understand a sentence, how to learn to read, how language and writing systems influence mental organizations.

 

TWO ASPECTS OF PSYCHOLINGUISTICS:

Language Comprehension: how we understand the meaning of words and sentences  (receptive process)

Language Production: how we speak and use language (productive process)

 

EXAMPLE: LANGUAGE PRODUCTION

Language production is a process from idea generation to language expression.

It is a mental process that is heavily influenced by language users’ culture.

 

IDEA: CROSS-CULTURAL COMMUNICATION

People using the same language (i.e. Indonesian Language) but coming from different cultures.

Example: Cultural differences in directness – how explicitly and clearly do we say what we mean.

 

BRITISH PROFESSOR

(least direct)

“Mr. Gore impresses one as very intelligent. As to his maturity and readiness for graduate study, I can say very little, having had an opportunity to observe him only under relatively unfavorable conditions.”

 

AMERICAN PROFESSOR

(intermediate directness)

“In my judgment, Gore is very intelligent. During the time I have known him, I have seen him grow in maturity; I hope and expect that this will continue when he begins graduate study.”

 

AUSTRALIAN PROFESSOR

(most direct)

“Gore’s brilliant, there’s no doubt about that. But he’s a bit of a baby, with a lot of growing up to do.”

 

CHINESE PROFESSOR

(from Mainland)

(Ignore the fact)

“Gore is a very smart student. He was doing extremely well in my class. He gets along well with everyone and is respected by others.”

 

EXAMPLE: VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION

When people encounter a printed word, how do they identify it?

Properties of the word

§  Visual or auditory (Modality)

§  Orthographic –whether a word is constructed in a legal way (e.g. “math” vs “mtah”)

§  Phonological (syllable: /cat/;  phoneme: /k/, /e/, /t/,

§  Meaning

 

In identifying a written word,

§    Visuo-orthographic analysis occurs. (activate, activation)

§   Is the meaning of a word accessed automatically?

§   Is the phonological information of a word accessed automatically?

 

EXAMPLE: WORD RECOGNITION

An Experiment:

Task: Speak out the color name of the stimulus you will view.  (red, blue, green)

Requirement: Complete the task as quickly and accurately as possible.

(The task was devised by Stroop, 1935 --the “Stroop task”.)

The above finding suggests that the meaning of words is activated automatically –people cannot control the activation of meaning.

Automaticity

What about the phonological information of a written word in a silent reading task?

Is a word’s phonology activated in a task that does not require reading aloud?










Terakhir diperbaharui: Thursday, 24 September 2020, 21:58